Command line utility to manage Astarte
astartectl
requires at least Go 1.18.
If you are using homebrew on your system, you can install astartectl
out of its tap:
brew tap astarte-platform/astarte
brew update
brew install astartectl
You can download latest astartectl
binaries for all platforms from GitHub Releases.
Move the binaries to your $PATH
folder or set your $PATH
to the folder where astartectl
is run from.
astartectl
works with a context-based configuration. If you are familiar with how kubectl
works, you'll
find most of its concepts in astartectl
configuration system. There are two main entities in astartectl
configuration: cluster
and context
.
A cluster
represents an Astarte Cluster. It might contain housekeeping credentials, but most of all it should
bear the API URLs necessary to interact with the cluster. astartectl config clusters
allows you to manipulate
available clusters.
A context
represents a configuration for astartectl
, which references a cluster
and, optionally an Astarte
Realm. A context
with no realm associated is meant to interact with Housekeeping (for, e.g., creating a Realm).
astartectl config contexts
allows you to manipulate available clusters.
At any time, when invoking astartectl
without any further configuration options, the active context
will be
used. There is only one context available at a time, which can be queried by issuing astartectl config current-context
.
The context can be changed at any time using astartectl config set-current-context
.
In most cases, if you have access to the Kubernetes Cluster hosting your Astarte Cluster, you will be able to
automatically build the cluster
entry in the configuration. This can be done through the
astartectl cluster instances get-cluster-config
command, which creates a cluster
entry based on the Astarte
instance installed on the Kubernetes cluster referenced by your current kubectl
context, if any.
In the same fashion, creating a new Realm automatically creates a new configuration context
, if a private
key and all necessary information are provided.
Run astartectl
to see available commands.